Wayne State University

College of liberal arts and sciences.

  • Office of the Dean
  • Return to clas.wayne.edu

Mark Lumley

Mark Lumley

Distinguished Professor

313-577-2247

313-577-7636 (fax)

[email protected]

5057 Woodward, Room 7304

Curriculum vitae

s.wayne.edu/lumleylab

mark lumley phd

I am a native of Detroit and attended Wayne State University as an undergraduate, majoring in both psychology and biology. I completed the Ph.D. program in clinical and health psychology at the University of Florida in Gainesville from 1985 until 1990, including a pre-doctoral clinical psychology internship (1989-1990) at the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. Subsequently, I had a post-doctoral fellowship (1990-1991) in behavioral medicine at the University of Michigan. I have been a faculty member in the Department of Psychology at Wayne State University since 1991.

I am a licensed clinical psychologist in Michigan and maintained a small practice for many years until I became the director of clinical training in the department in 2005 – a position I held through 2022. I very much enjoy teaching and mentoring graduate students, and have graduated 47 Ph.D. students. I also conduct clinical supervision at our in-house training clinic and develop and test novel emotional processing therapy interventions with students in my lab.

As one who studies "disclosure," I also value it highly. So, I'll disclose that I am married, a father of four sons (identical twins born in 1990 and sons born in 1992 and 1994), try to play soccer, tennis and most recently, pickleball, get injured often, and sing in a Methodist church contemporary group (tenor).

Research interest(s)/area of expertise

My primary scholarly interests are on emotions, stress, and physical health. Much of the research that my students, colleagues, and I conduct involves developing and testing emotion-focused interventions to reduce stress and improve health. For example, in numerous studies, we have examined the effects of written or verbal emotional disclosure. More recently, we have developed and have tested "Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy" (EAET) for people who have centralized psychosomatic conditions, such as fibromyalgia, headaches, chronic musculoskeletal pain, irritable bowel syndrome and pelvic pain.

We are demonstrating that directly targeting unresolved stress, trauma, and psychological conflict is very helpful for many patients with these conditions. EAET is listed as one of the evidence-based behavioral treatments by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Pain Management Best Practices Inter-agency Task Force Report (2019). We also are interested in individual differences in emotional abilities and deficits, such as the personality construct of alexithymia, and how such individual differences influence responses to our interventions. I am collaborating on research related to EAET with numerous groups around the country and world. I am also involved with the development and testing of Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT), which is closely related to EAET but focuses more on reducing people's fear of their pain and changing their fearful attributions for their pain "from body to brain."

We have developed various manuals or protocols to study EAET in clinical trials, and these are described briefly here along with links to the documents. These are freely available for downloading and use.

In 2012, we developed this EAET Therapist Manual and EAET Patient Workbook for an 8-session, group-based therapy for people with fibromyalgia:

  • Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy: Therapist Manual
  • Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy: Patient Workbook

We developed and used in several trials the Life Stress EAET Interview Protocol, which is designed for a single, 90-minute session with a patient:

  • Stress and Health EAET Interview Protocol

We developed a three-session (brief) version of individually-administered EAET and used in a trial for people with irritable bowel syndrome:

  • Brief (three-session) Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy Manual

 This document lists EAET Principles and Procedures for Practitioners . This document lists EAET Suggestions and Instructions for Patients .

This document provides an annotated bibliography and additional references of studies on EAET and related approaches that we and others have conducted:

  • Annotated Bibliography of Publications on EAET and Related Approaches
  • Ph.D., University of Florida (Department of Clinical and Health Psychology), 1990
  • B.S. (2) in Psychology and Biology, Wayne State University, 1985
  • Licensed Psychologist, Michigan

Awards and grants

Here are some of the major grants that I have had in recent years:

  • Co-investigator (5%). 2R44 NR017575. “Efficacy of a Virtual Reality Neuroscience-based Therapy for Chronic Low Back Pain. National Institute of Nursing Research (NIH/NINR), 6/11/2024 - 3/31/2027. Total costs: $1,843,764. (Tassilo Baeuerle & Marta Ceko, Multiple PI)
  • Co-Principal Investigator. R01 NR020610: "Comparative mechanisms (mediators, moderators) of psychosocial chronic pain treatments. National Institute of Nursing Research (NIH/NINR), 9/26/2022 - 6/30/2026. Total costs: $2,802,546. (John Burns & Mark Lumley, Multiple PI)
  • Co-investigator. R21 NR018972: “Automated Physiological Assessment of Chronic Pain in Daily Life.” National Institute of Nursing Research (NIH/NINR), 4/1/2021 - 3/31/2023. Total costs: $419,129. (Marta Ceko, PI)
  • Co-investigator. “Examining the efficacy of a novel stress reduction training on the reversal of prediabetes: A feasibility study. Blue Cross Blue Shield Foundation of Michigan, 1/1/2020 – 12/30/2022; Total costs: $70,000. (Maha Albdour, PI)
  • Co-investigator. R61/R33 MH111935. "Effects of THC on retention of memory for fear extinction learning in PTSD." National Institute of Mental Health, 2/24/2017 - 12/31/2023; Total costs: $1,438,000. (Christine Rabinak, PI)
  • Co-Principal Investigator. R21 AR074020. “Development and preliminary testing of novel virtual human-assisted psychosocial interviews for patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain.” National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIH/NIAMS), 9/1/2018 – 6/30/2021; Total costs: $381,808. (Doerte Junghaenel & Mark Lumley, Multiple PI)
  • Co-investigator. R21 AT007939: “Preliminary test of an integrative intervention to alleviate chronic pain and improve quality of life.” National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, 8/1/2014 – 7/31/2016; Total costs: $404,950. (Annmarie Cano, PI)
  • Principal Investigator. R01AR057808: “Emotional exposure and cognitive behavioral therapies for fibromyalgia.” National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases, 8/15/2010 – 6/30/2015; Total costs: $3,373,353
  • Site Principal Investigator. R01AR057047: “Anger suppression and expression among chronic pain patients.” National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases, 4/2010 – 3/2014; Total costs to Wayne State: $920,458. (John Burns, Rush University Medical Center, is PI of primary grant)
  • Co-investigator. R01 MH085793: “Health in Iraqi refugees: Importance of post-displacement social stressors.” National Institute of Mental Health, 7/1/2010 – 2/28/2015; Total costs: $2,641,514. (Bengt Arnetz, PI)
  • Co-investigator. R34 MH086943: “Imagery-based trauma-resiliency training for urban police.” National Institute of Mental Health, 8/2009 – 5/2012; Total costs: $679,718. (Bengt Arnetz, PI)
  • Co-investigator. R21 HL097191: “Perceived fairness and biological stress reactivity.” National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, 8/15/2010 – 4/30/2012; Total costs: $418,000. (Todd Lucas, PI)
  • Principal Investigator. R01 AR049059: “Disclosure and skills training for rheumatoid arthritis.” National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases, 8/2004 – 5/2009; Total costs: $2,646,682

News mentions

  • Wayne State professor receives career achievement award from the Society for Health Psychology

Selected publications

The following is taken from my NIH Biosketch.

Personal statement

I hold the rank of distinguished professor at Wayne State University (an R1, Highest Research Activity institution) and am also a licensed clinical psychologist. My research program is internationally recognized for advancing knowledge and practice on stress, emotional processes (e.g., alexithymia, emotional disclosure, emotional expression), and health, particularly in chronic pain disorders. I have been continuously funded by the National Institutes of Health for over two decades, have published over 200 peer-reviewed articles (Google Scholar h-index = 78), and am a Fellow of several professional societies.

I have specific expertise in the development and testing of psychological interventions for people with chronic pain, including written and spoken emotional disclosure techniques, Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT), and Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET), which I co-developed. My colleagues and I have demonstrated the benefits of these interventions in many small- and large-scale randomized clinical trials, encouraging the field to improve chronic pain treatments by seeking recovery from chronic primary pain and by targeting trauma and emotional/interpersonal conflict via emotional processing. EAET is listed as an evidence-based treatment option in the 2019 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Pain Management Best Practices Inter-agency Task Force Report.

Several of my recent articles (with trainees noted in italics) that review this body of work are:

  • Lumley, M.A., Yamin, J.B., Pester, B.D., Krohner, S., & Urbanik, C.P. (2022). Trauma matters: Psychological interventions for comorbid psychosocial trauma and chronic pain. PAIN, 163 , 599-603. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002425.
  • Lumley, M.A., & Schubiner, H. (2019). Emotional awareness and expression therapy for chronic pain: Rationale, principles and techniques, evidence, and critical analysis. Current Rheumatology Reports, 21 , Article 30. PMCID: PMC7309024. doi.org/10.1007/s11926-019-0829-6.
  • Lumley, M.A., & Schubiner, H. (2019). Psychological therapy for centralized pain: An integrative assessment and treatment model. Psychosomatic Medicine, 81 , 114-124. PMCID: PMC6355353.
  • Aaron, R.V., Finan, P.H., Wegener, S.T., Keefe, F.J., & Lumley, M.A. (2020). Emotion regulation as a transdiagnostic factor underlying co-occurring chronic pain and problematic opioid use. American Psychologist, 75 , 796-810. PMCID: PMC8100821.

Contributions to science

Health correlates of emotional awareness and expression.

We have published numerous studies of the correlates of alexithymia (deficient emotional awareness and expression) and other emotional processes using a range of assessment methods. We have reported how emotional processes relate to chronic pain, mental health, sleep, smoking, physiological reactivity, gambling, symptom awareness, health care utilization, disease biomarkers, and many other outcomes. Much of this work is included in two major meta-analyses (a and b below) and a highly cited review of pain and emotion (c, below). This work shows that limited emotional awareness and expression are risk factors for poor health.

  • Asgarabad, M.H., Yegaei, P.S., Jafari, F., Azami-Aghdash, S., & Lumley, M.A. (2023). The relationship of alexithymia to pain and other symptoms in fibromyalgia: A systematic review and meta-analysis.  European Journal of Pain, 27 , 321-337.
  • Aaron, R.V., Fisher, E.A., de la Vega, R., Lumley, M.A., & Palermo, T.M. (2019). Alexithymia in individuals with chronic pain and its relation to pain intensity, physical interference, depression, and anxiety: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PAIN, 160 , 994-1006.
  • Lumley, M.A., Cohen, J.L ., Borszcz, G.S., Cano, A., Radcliffe, A ., Porter, L., Schubiner, H., & Keefe, F.J. (2011). Pain and emotion: A biopsychosocial review of recent research. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 67 , 1-27. PMCID: PMC3152687.
  • Lumley, M.A., Neely, L.C., & Burger, A.J. (2007). Assessing alexithymia in the medical setting: Implications for understanding and treating health problems. Journal of Personality Assessment, 89 , 1-17. PMCID: PMC2931418.

Experimental research on emotional disclosure

To test whether such emotional processes are causally related to health, my students and I have conducted 16 controlled experiments on the health effects of privately writing or speaking about trauma or stress (“emotional disclosure”) in people with chronic pain or other conditions/stressors. We have demonstrated that people often experience stressors that are not disclosed or resolved, disclosure has positive but small health benefits, and this technique tends to work best for people with some emotional skills. We reviewed this literature for chronic pain (d, below).

  • Krohner, S., Town, J., Cannoy, C.N. , Schubiner, H., Rapport, L.J., Grekin, E., & Lumley, M.A. (2024). Emotion-focused psychodynamic interview for people with chronic musculoskeletal pain and childhood adversity: A randomized controlled trial. The Journal of Pain, 25 , 39-52.
  • Holmes, H.J., Yamin, J.B., Krohner, S ., Rapport, L.J., Grekin, E.R., Schubiner, H., & Lumley, M.A. (2021). Effects of a sexual health interview among Arab American women: An experimental disclosure study. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 50 , 373-384.
  • Lumley, M.A., Keefe, F.J., et al. (2014). The effects of written emotional disclosure and coping skills training in rheumatoid arthritis: A randomized clinical trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 82 , 644-658. PMCID: PMC4115002.
  • Lumley, M.A., Sklar, E.R., & Carty, J.N . (2012). Emotional disclosure interventions for chronic pain: From the laboratory to the clinic. Translational Behavioral Medicine: Practice, Policy, Research, 2 , 73-81. PMCID: PMC3419371.

Development and testing of innovative methods of intervention delivery

My colleagues and I have become increasingly interested in testing alternatives to in-person delivery of clinical interventions for people with chronic pain and related disorders. Thus, in recent years, we have examined virtual reality interventions (a below), interventions delivered by computer avatar (b, below), over the internet (c, below), and via telehealth (d, below). These studies demonstrate the success of these innovative methods.

  • Čeko, M., Baeuerle, T., Webster, L., Wager, T.D., & Lumley, M.A. (in press, 2024). The effects of virtual reality neuroscience-based therapy on clinical and neuroimaging outcomes in patients with chronic back pain: A randomized clinical trial. PAIN .
  • Junghaenel, D.U., Schneider, S., Lucas, G., Boberg, J., Weinstein, F.M., Richeimer, S.H., Stone, A.A., & Lumley, M.A. (2023). Virtual human-delivered interviews for patients with chronic pain: Feasibility, acceptability, and a pilot randomized trial of standard medical, psychosocial, and educational interviews. Psychosomatic Medicine, 85 , 627-638.
  • Maroti, D., Lumley, M.A., Schubiner, H., Lilliengren, P., Bileviciute-Ljungar, I., Ljótsson, B., & Johansson, R. (2022). Internet-based emotional awareness and expression therapy for somatic symptom disorder: A randomized, controlled trial. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 163 , Article 111068.
  • Yarns, B.C., Molaie, A.M., Lumley, M.A., Zhu, T.A., Jazi, A.N., Ganz, D.A., & Melrose, R.J. (2024). Video telehealth Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy for older U.S. Military veterans with chronic pain: A pilot study. Clinical Gerontologist, 47 , 136-148.

Developing and testing emotional exposure and pain reprocessing therapies

Many patients with chronic pain and other somatic symptoms have trauma or unresolved conflicts and fear-based beliefs about their bodies and pain, and avoidance of their emotions and activities triggers or maintain their symptoms. Standard pain management or acceptance treatments have limited effects on pain, perhaps because they do not directly address the underlying trauma, emotional conflict, fear-based avoidance, and disturbed relationships found in many of these patients.

Exposure-based therapies, however, are effective for trauma and other anxiety disorders, so my colleagues and I have developed and tested novel emotional and pain exposure / processing approaches for patients with various chronic pain disorders. These studies suggest that targeting fears of emotions and of pain can lead to substantial pain reductions in some patients.

  • Ashar, Y.K., Gordon, A., Schubiner, H., Uipi, C., Knight, K., Anderson, Z, Carlisle, J., Polisky, L., Geuter, S., Flood, T., Kragel, P., Dimidjian, S., Lumley, M.A., & Wager, T.D. (2022). Pain reprocessing therapy for chronic back pain: A randomized clinical trial with functional neuroimaging. JAMA Psychiatry, 79 , 13-23.
  • Ashar, Y.K., Perlis, R.H., Liston, C., Lumley, M.A., Gunning, F.M., & Wager, T.D. (2023). Reattributing the causes of chronic back pain: A natural language investigation of mechanisms of pain reprocessing therapy. JAMA Network Open, 6( 9):e2333846. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.33846.
  • Ziadni, M.S., Sturgeon, J.A., & Lumley, M.A. (2022). “Pain, stress, and emotions”: Uncontrolled trial of a single-session, telehealth, Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy class for patients with chronic pain. Frontiers in Pain Research, 3 , Article 1028561.
  • Burger, A.J., Lumley, M.A., Carty, J.N., Latsch, D.V., Thakur, E.R., Hyde-Nolan, M.E., Hijazi, A.M., & Schubiner, H. (2016). The effects of a novel psychological attribution and emotional awareness and expression therapy for chronic musculoskeletal pain: A preliminary, uncontrolled trial. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 81 , 1-8. PMCID: PMC4724386.

Clinical trials of Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET)

Our team has developed EAET. In eight randomized trials, we have tested EAET on various “centralized” or “nociplastic” pain disorders including a large-scale trial in fibromyalgia (a, below). Two trials indicate superiority of EAET over CBT (a and d, below).

  • Lumley, M.A., Schubiner, H., Lockhart, N.A., Kidwell, K.M., Harte, S., Clauw, D.J., & Williams, D.A. (2017). Emotional awareness and expression therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, and education for fibromyalgia: A cluster-randomized, controlled trial. PAIN, 158 , 2354-2363. PMCID: PMC5680092.
  • Thakur, E.R., Holmes, H.J., Lockhart, N.A., Carty, J.N., Ziadni, M.S., Doherty, H.K ., Lackner, J.M., Schubiner, H., & Lumley, M.A. (2017). Emotional awareness and expression training improves irritable bowel syndrome: A randomized controlled trial. Neurogastroenterology and Motility, 29 :e13143. PMCID: PMC5690851.
  • Ziadni, M.S., Carty, J.N., Doherty, H.K ., Porcerelli, J.H., Rapport, L.J., Schubiner, H., & Lumley, M.A. (2018). A life-stress emotional awareness and expression interview for primary care patients with medically unexplained symptoms: A randomized controlled trial. Health Psychology, 37 , 282-290. PMCID: PMC5848463.
  • Yarns, B.C., Jackson, N.J., Alas, A., Melrose, R.J, Lumley, M.A., & Sultzer, D.L. (2024). Emotional awareness and expression therapy or cognitive behavioral therapy for chronic pain in older adults: A randomized clinical trial. JAMA Network Open, 7(6), e2417340 .

Citation index

  • Google Scholar

Courses taught by Mark Lumley

Fall term 2024 (future).

  • PSY7370 - Psychological Interventions I

Winter Term 2024

  • PSY7270 - Research Methods in Clinical Psychology

Fall Term 2023

  • PSY7240 - Ethics, Professional Issues, and Diversity

Winter Term 2023

Fall term 2022, winter term 2022.

2155 Old Main 4841 Cass Avenue, Detroit, MI 48201 313-577-2515

Privacy and University Policies

Wayne State University © 2020

UW Psychiatry Grand Rounds | “Novel Psychological Treatments for Chronic Pain” | Mark Lumley, PhD

August 16 @ 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm.

WisPIC Commons Room 6001 Research Park Blvd in Madison, WI + Virtual Event – via WebEx

UW Psychiatry Grand Rounds | Mark Lumley, PhD

“novel psychological treatments for chronic pain”.

Mark A. Lumley , Ph.D. Distinguished Professor Department of Psychology, Wayne State University

Learning Objectives:

  • Discuss limitations of current pain management interventions
  • Describe Pain Reprocessing Therapy and Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy and how they overcome these limitations.
  • Identify opportunities and barriers for health care providers in the use of these approaches.

Reading List: 

  • Lumley, M.A., & Schubiner, H. (2019). Psychological therapy for centralized pain: An integrative assessment and treatment model. Psychosomatic Medicine , 81 , 114-124.
  • Lumley, M.A., & Schubiner, H. (2019). Emotional awareness and expression therapy for chronic pain: Rationale, principles and techniques, evidence, and critical review. Current Rheumatology Reports, 21 , 30.
  • Lumley, M.A., Yamin, J.B., Pester, B.D., Krohner, S., & Urbanik, C.P. (2022). Trauma matters: Psychological interventions for comorbid psychosocial trauma and chronic pain. PAIN, 163 , 599-603.

mark lumley phd

Webex Info:

mark lumley phd

American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) The University of Wisconsin–Madison ICEP designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.0 ANCC contact hours.

American Psychological Association (APA) Continuing Education (CE) credits for psychologists are provided through the co-sponsorship of the American Psychological Association (APA) Office of Continuing Education in Psychology (CEP). The APA CEP Office maintains responsi-bility for the content of the programs.

Continuing Education Units Continuing Education (CE) credits for psychologists are provided through the co-sponsorship of the American Psychological Association (APA) Office of Continuing Education in Psychology (CEP). The APA CEP Office maintains responsibility for the content of the programs.

Continuing Education Units. The University of Wisconsin–Madison ICEP , as a member of the University Professional & Continuing Educa-tion Association (UPCEA), authorizes this program for 0.125 continuing education units (CEUs) or 1.25 hours.

  • Google Calendar
  • Outlook 365
  • Outlook Live

mark lumley phd

  • Subscribe to journal Subscribe
  • Get new issue alerts Get alerts

Secondary Logo

Journal logo.

Colleague's E-mail is Invalid

Your message has been successfully sent to your colleague.

Save my selection

Psychological Therapy for Centralized Pain: An Integrative Assessment and Treatment Model

Lumley, Mark A. PhD; Schubiner, Howard MD

From the Department of Psychology (Lumley), Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan; and Department of Internal Medicine (Schubiner), Providence-Providence Park Hospital, Ascension Health, and Michigan State University College of Human Medicine, Southfield, Michigan.

Address correspondence to Mark A. Lumley, PhD, Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, 5057 Woodward Ave, Suite 7908, Detroit, MI 48202. E-mail: [email protected]

Received for publication December 1, 2017; revision received July 20, 2018.

Objective 

Chronic pain is a significant health problem that is increasing in prevalence, and advances in treatment are needed.

Methods 

We briefly review the leading evidence-based psychological therapies for chronic pain—cognitive-behavioral and acceptance/mindfulness-based therapies—and examine several limitations and missing perspectives of these approaches. We review six lesser-known interventions that address these limitations, and we describe our integrative model for psychological assessment and treatment of centralized pain. We present a typical patient and describe how we apply this approach, along with challenges to its implementation and possible solutions to these challenges.

Results 

Greater pain treatment efficacy may be possible if clinicians: ( a ) distinguish patients with primarily centralized (i.e., somatoform or nociplastic) pain from those with primarily peripheral (nociceptive, inflammatory, or neuropathic) pain; ( b ) acknowledge the capacity of the brain not only to modulate pain but also generate as well as attenuate or eliminate centralized pain; ( c ) consider the powerful role that adverse life experiences and psychological conflicts play in centralized pain; and ( d ) integrate emotional processing and interpersonal changes into treatment. Our integrative treatment involves delivering a progression of interventions, as needed, to achieve pain reduction: tailored pain neuroscience education, cognitive and mindfulness skills to decrease the pain danger alarm mechanism, behavioral engagement in avoided painful and other feared activities, emotional awareness and expression to reverse emotional avoidance and overcome trauma or psychological conflict, and adaptive communication to decrease interpersonal stress.

Conclusions 

This integrative assessment and treatment model has the potential to substantially reduce and sometimes eliminate centralized pain by changing the cognitive, behavioral, emotional, and interpersonal processes that trigger and maintain centralized pain.

Full Text Access for Subscribers:

Individual subscribers.

mark lumley phd

Institutional Users

Not a subscriber.

You can read the full text of this article if you:

  • + Favorites
  • View in Gallery

Readers Of this Article Also Read

Mindfulness and more: toward a science of human flourishing, dispositional mindfulness and acute heat pain: comparing stimulus-evoked pain..., top-down cortical control of acute and chronic pain, illness anxiety disorder: psychopathology, epidemiology, clinical..., differential associations between delirium and mortality according to delirium....

mark lumley phd

CognifiSense's team and advisors represent decades of experience across the healthcare and technology industries.

lMG_crop-removebg-preview_edited.png

Neuroscience

Assistant Research Professor, Institute of Cognitive Science (University of Colorado, Boulder)

Mask group-2.png

Mark Lumley

Distinguished Professor, Department of Psychology (Wayne State University), and pain psychology expert

Dr-Steffen-Sturzebecher_Druck_hoch_7x10_cm_bearb_square-removebg.png

Steffen Stuerzebecher

Clinical Development

Former CMO Grünenthal (top-3 pain pharma), serial biotech CMO across multiple therapeutic areas

CS-headshot-Tassilo-080918-300x300-square-removebg-preview 1.png

Tassilo Baeuerle

M. ENG, MBA Co-Founder & CEO

Neurotech disruptor with multiple healthcare XR patents.  15+ years as execution-focused CEO; a.o. 6 turnarounds.  Prior to starting CognifiSense led Tier 1 VC-funded startup to successful exit

Mask Group.png

Harald Stock

Co-Founder & NED

20+ years of step-change value creation through strategic corporate development.  Three times mid-cap healthcare CEO;  a.o., at Grünenthal (top-3 pain pharma).  Serial biotech co-founder & NED; so far 6 IPOs, 4 M&As, $1b+ financings / transactions

  • Children & Family Committee
  • Communications Committee
  • Disaster Response Network Committee
  • Diversity, Inclusion and Social Responsibility Committee
  • Early Career Psychologists Committee
  • Ethics Committee
  • Finance Committee
  • Graduate Students Committee
  • Insurance Committee
  • Integrated Care Committee
  • Licensure Committee
  • Master's Committee
  • Membership Committee
  • Program Committee
  • Regional Membership Groups Committee
  • Action Center
  • Advocacy Work Group
  • Federal Advocacy Coordinator
  • Task Forces
  • Public Statements
  • Member Benefits
  • Membership Types
  • Member Spotlight
  • Annual Conferences
  • Job Listings
  • Advertise with MPA
  • About Psychologists
  • Resources for Children
  • Resources for Adults
  • Resources for Testing
  • Resources for Diversity
  • Pain and Opioid Information
  • Psypact Resources
  • Graduate Students
  • Find a Psychologist
  • Board of Directors
  • Awards & Scholarships
  • Donate to MPAF

mark lumley phd

Keep me logged in

 
-->
See by month Search Jump to month

The Impact of Emotions on Pain and Restoration of Functioning

Speakers: Mark Lumley, PhD & J. Bruce Hillenberg, PhD, ABPP

Register HERE !

Learning Objectives:

  • Understand links between emotional processes and learning, and pain, and how emotions, emotional processes and emotionally-driven behaviors can cause or amplify pain
  • Identify the similarities and differences between nociceptive/neuropathic and centralized/nociplastic pain
  • Describe techniques to improve emotional awareness and expression, and extinguish conditioned-emotional responses to reduce pain

mark lumley phd

The Role of Emotions in Pain Management

mark lumley phd

Quick Links

  • Donate to MPA
  • Contact MPA

Upcoming Events

No events

View Full Calendar

Michigan psychological association.

U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

The .gov means it’s official. Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

The site is secure. The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

  • Publications
  • Account settings

Preview improvements coming to the PMC website in October 2024. Learn More or Try it out now .

  • Advanced Search
  • Journal List
  • JAMA Network

Effect of Pain Reprocessing Therapy vs Placebo and Usual Care for Patients With Chronic Back Pain

Yoni k. ashar.

1 Department of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York City, New York

2 Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado, Boulder

3 Institute of Cognitive Science, University of Colorado, Boulder

Alan Gordon

4 Pain Psychology Center, Los Angeles, California

Howard Schubiner

5 Ascension Providence Hospital, Southfield, Michigan

6 Michigan State University College of Human Medicine, East Lansing

Christie Uipi

Karen knight.

7 Panorama Orthopedics and Spine Center, Golden, Colorado

Zachary Anderson

8 Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois

Judith Carlisle

9 Department of Philosophy, Washington University in Saint Louis, Saint Louis, Missouri

Laurie Polisky

Stephan geuter.

10 Johns Hopkins University Department of Biostatistics, Baltimore, Maryland

Thomas F. Flood

11 Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

Philip A. Kragel

12 Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia

Sona Dimidjian

13 Renée Crown Wellness Institute, University of Colorado, Boulder

Mark A. Lumley

14 Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan

Tor D. Wager

15 Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire

Accepted for Publication: July 27, 2021.

Published Online: September 29, 2021. doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2021.2669

Open Access: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License . © 2021 Ashar YK et al. JAMA Psychiatry .

Author Contributions : Drs Ashar and Wager had full access to all the data in the study and take responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

Concept and design : Ashar, Gordon, Schubiner, Uipi, Knight, Geuter, Dimidjian, Wager.

Acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data : Ashar, Gordon, Schubiner, Uipi, Knight, Anderson, Carlisle, Polisky, Geuter, Flood, Kragel, Lumley, Wager.

Drafting of the manuscript : Ashar, Gordon, Schubiner, Polisky, Lumley, Wager.

Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content : All authors.

Statistical analysis : Ashar, Polisky, Geuter, Lumley, Wager.

Obtained funding : Gordon, Schubiner, Flood, Wager.

Administrative, technical, or material support : Ashar, Uipi, Knight, Anderson, Carlisle, Polisky, Kragel, Dimidjian, Lumley, Wager.

Supervision : Ashar, Gordon, Wager.

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Ashar reports grants from the National Institutes of Health during the conduct of the study and personal fees from UnitedHealth Group, Lin Health, Inc, Pain Reprocessing Therapy Center, Inc, and Mental Health Partners of Boulder County outside the submitted work. Mr Gordon is a consultant with UnitedHealth Group, director of the Pain Psychology Center and the Pain Reprocessing Therapy Center, and is the author of the book The Way Out . Dr Schubiner is the co-owner of Freedom From Chronic Pain, Inc, earns book royalties for Unlearn Your Pain, Unlearn Your Anxiety and Depression and Hidden From View ; serves as a consultant with UnitedHealth Group, Karuna Labs, and Curable Health; and receives personal fees from OVID Dx outside the submitted work. Mrs Uipi serves as a consultant for UnitedHealth Group. Dr Dimidjian reports being a co-founder of Mindful Noggin, Inc, and received royalties from Guilford Press and Wolters Kluwer as well as funding from The National Institutes of Health. Dr Lumley reports personal fees from CognifiSense, Inc, outside the submitted work. Dr Wager reports grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Foundation for the Study of the Therapeutic Encounter, and funding to support trainees from the Radiological Society of North America and the German Research Foundation; he is on the Scientific Advisory Board of Curable Health. No other disclosures were reported.

Funding and Support: This study was funded by National Institutes of Health grants R01 DA035484 (Dr Wager), R01 MH076136 (Dr Wager), National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences grant TL1-TR-002386 (Dr Ashar), Radiological Society of North America (Dr Flood), German Research Foundation grant GE 2774/1-1 (Dr Geuter), the Psychophysiologic Disorders Association, the Foundation for the Study of the Therapeutic Encounter, and community donations.

Role of the Funder/Sponsor: The funders had no role in the design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript; and decision to submit the manuscript for publication.

Data Sharing Statement: See Supplement 3 .

Additional Information: Deidentified demographic and clinical outcomes data and subject-level functional magnetic resonance imaging statistical parameter maps for evoked pain and seed connectivity are provided here: https://figshare.com/s/1840dc4c0e236a7072ca

Associated Data

eDiscussion

eTable 1. Spinal anomalies among participants randomized to PRT

eTable 2. Treatment response rates

eTable 3. Secondary clinical outcomes measured only at pretreatment and posttreatment

eTable 4. Treatment satisfaction and patient global impression of change

eTable 5. Mediation results

eTable 6. Values for mediators at each timepoint

eTable 7. Evoked back pain localizer results

eTable 8. Regions showing pretreatment to posttreatment connectivity changes for PRT vs placebo or PRT vs usual care

eFigure 1. Evoked back pain localizer

eFigure 2. Target masks for seed connectivity analyses

eFigure 3. Individual trajectories of pain intensity for participants in the PRT, placebo and usual care groups

eFigure 4. Effects of PRT on pain-related fear and avoidance and beliefs that pain indicates injury

eFigure 5. Evoked back pain at pretreatment

eFigure 6. High vs low thumb pressure stimulation

eFigure 7. Histogram of quality control-functional connectivity correlations for spontaneous pain scans

eFigure 8. Continuous pain regressors for 4 randomly chosen sample individuals

eAppendix 1. Initial medical pain assessment and education session

eAppendix 2. Pain reprocessing therapy description

eAppendix 3. PRT treatment fidelity checklist

eReferences

Can a psychological treatment based on the reappraisal of primary chronic back pain as due to nondangerous central nervous system processes provide substantial and durable pain relief?

In this randomized clinical trial, 33 of 50 participants (66%) randomized to 4 weeks of pain reprocessing therapy were pain-free or nearly pain-free at posttreatment, compared with 10 of 51 participants (20%) randomized to placebo and 5 of 50 participants (10%) randomized to usual care, with gains largely maintained through 1-year follow-up. Treatment effects on pain were mediated by reduced beliefs that pain indicates tissue damage, and longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging showed reduced prefrontal responses to evoked back pain and increased resting prefrontal-somatosensory connectivity in patients randomized to treatment relative to patients randomized to placebo or usual care.

Psychological treatment focused on changing beliefs about the causes and threat value of primary chronic back pain may provide substantial and durable pain relief.

This randomized clinical trial tests whether pain reprocessing therapy can provide durable and substantial relief from chronic back pain and investigates treatment mechanisms.

Chronic back pain (CBP) is a leading cause of disability, and treatment is often ineffective. Approximately 85% of cases are primary CBP, for which peripheral etiology cannot be identified, and maintenance factors include fear, avoidance, and beliefs that pain indicates injury.

To test whether a psychological treatment (pain reprocessing therapy [PRT]) aiming to shift patients’ beliefs about the causes and threat value of pain provides substantial and durable pain relief from primary CBP and to investigate treatment mechanisms.

Design, Setting, and Participants

This randomized clinical trial with longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and 1-year follow-up assessment was conducted in a university research setting from November 2017 to August 2018, with 1-year follow-up completed by November 2019. Clinical and fMRI data were analyzed from January 2019 to August 2020. The study compared PRT with an open-label placebo treatment and with usual care in a community sample.

Interventions

Participants randomized to PRT participated in 1 telehealth session with a physician and 8 psychological treatment sessions over 4 weeks. Treatment aimed to help patients reconceptualize their pain as due to nondangerous brain activity rather than peripheral tissue injury, using a combination of cognitive, somatic, and exposure-based techniques. Participants randomized to placebo received an open-label subcutaneous saline injection in the back; participants randomized to usual care continued their routine, ongoing care.

Main Outcomes and Measures

One-week mean back pain intensity score (0 to 10) at posttreatment, pain beliefs, and fMRI measures of evoked pain and resting connectivity.

At baseline, 151 adults (54% female; mean [SD] age, 41.1 [15.6] years) reported mean (SD) pain of low to moderate severity (mean [SD] pain intensity, 4.10 [1.26] of 10; mean [SD] disability, 23.34 [10.12] of 100) and mean (SD) pain duration of 10.0 (8.9) years. Large group differences in pain were observed at posttreatment, with a mean (SD) pain score of 1.18 (1.24) in the PRT group, 2.84 (1.64) in the placebo group, and 3.13 (1.45) in the usual care group. Hedges g was −1.14 for PRT vs placebo and −1.74 for PRT vs usual care ( P  < .001). Of 151 total participants, 33 of 50 participants (66%) randomized to PRT were pain-free or nearly pain-free at posttreatment (reporting a pain intensity score of 0 or 1 of 10), compared with 10 of 51 participants (20%) randomized to placebo and 5 of 50 participants (10%) randomized to usual care. Treatment effects were maintained at 1-year follow-up, with a mean (SD) pain score of 1.51 (1.59) in the PRT group, 2.79 (1.78) in the placebo group, and 3.00 (1.77) in the usual care group. Hedges g was −0.70 for PRT vs placebo ( P  = .001) and −1.05 for PRT vs usual care ( P  < .001) at 1-year follow-up. Longitudinal fMRI showed (1) reduced responses to evoked back pain in the anterior midcingulate and the anterior prefrontal cortex for PRT vs placebo; (2) reduced responses in the anterior insula for PRT vs usual care; (3) increased resting connectivity from the anterior prefrontal cortex and the anterior insula to the primary somatosensory cortex for PRT vs both control groups; and (4) increased connectivity from the anterior midcingulate to the precuneus for PRT vs usual care.

Conclusions and Relevance

Psychological treatment centered on changing patients’ beliefs about the causes and threat value of pain may provide substantial and durable pain relief for people with CBP.

Trial Registration

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: {"type":"clinical-trial","attrs":{"text":"NCT03294148","term_id":"NCT03294148"}} NCT03294148 .

Introduction

Chronic pain affects 20% of people in the US, with an estimated annual cost of more than $600 billion. 1 , 2 The most common type is chronic back pain (CBP). In approximately 85% of cases, definitive peripheral causes of CBP cannot be identified, and central nervous system processes are thought to maintain pain. 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 For people with this type of CBP— often referred to as primary, nonspecific, nociplastic, or centralized pain—psychological and behavioral treatments are recommended. 8 , 9 , 10 Although these treatments can improve functioning, reductions in pain intensity are limited 11 , 12 and better treatments are needed.

Advances in the neuroscience of pain 13 , 14 , 15 , 16 , 17 and interoception 18 , 19 , 20 , 21 suggest new directions for treatment development. In constructionist and active inference models, pain is a prediction about bodily harm, shaped by sensory input and context-based predictions. 18 , 19 , 22 , 23 , 24 , 25 , 26 Fearful appraisals of tissue damage can cause innocuous somatosensory input to be interpreted and experienced as painful. 22 , 24 , 27 , 28 Such constructed perceptions can become self-reinforcing: threat appraisals enhance pain, which is in turn threatening, creating positive feedback loops that maintain pain after initial injuries have healed. 27 , 29 , 30 , 31

As pain becomes chronic, it is increasingly associated with activity in the affective and motivational systems tied to avoidance and less closely tied to systems encoding nociceptive input. 14 , 32 , 33 , 34 Accordingly, brain regions serving allostasis and predictive control 18 , 23 —including the default mode network, somatosensory and insular cortices, amygdala, and nucleus accumbens—have been implicated in animal models 13 , 14 , 15 , 16 , 17 and human studies of chronic pain 22 , 25 , 32 , 33 , 35 , 36 and pain modulation. 24 , 25 , 28 , 37 , 38 , 39

We developed pain reprocessing therapy (PRT) based on this understanding of primary chronic pain. Leading psychological interventions for pain typically present the causes of pain as multifaceted and aim primarily to improve functioning and secondarily to reduce pain. PRT emphasizes that the brain actively constructs primary chronic pain in the absence of tissue damage and that reappraising the causes and threat value of pain can reduce or eliminate it.

In this study, we conducted the first test of PRT. In a randomized clinical trial with 1-year follow-up, we compared PRT with both open-label placebo and usual care control conditions. We tested hypothesized mechanisms of PRT with mediation analyses and longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during spontaneously occurring and evoked back pain. fMRI provided objective correlates of treatment effects and identified potential neurobiological treatment mechanisms.

Participants and Trial Design

The trial was preregistered on ClinicalTrials.gov (Identifier: {"type":"clinical-trial","attrs":{"text":"NCT03294148","term_id":"NCT03294148"}} NCT03294148 ) and conducted from August 2017 to November 2018, with 1-year follow-up completed by November 2019. Clinical and fMRI data were analyzed from January 2019 to August 2020, after data collection at each follow-up timepoint was complete. Participants aged 21 to 70 years with back pain for at least half the days of the last 6 months and 1-week average pain intensity score of 4 of 10 or greater at screening were recruited from the community in Boulder, Colorado. We targeted primary CBP, excluding patients with leg pain worse than back pain (eMethods in Supplement 2 ). Power analysis targeted 80% power (α = .05) to detect a medium effect ( d  = 0.62) on pain intensity at the primary end point (eMethods in Supplement 2). Participants provided written informed consent as approved by the University of Colorado Institutional Review Board. The study followed the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials ( CONSORT ) reporting guideline for social and psychological intervention trials.

Participants completed an eligibility and consent session, followed by a baseline assessment session with fMRI. They were subsequently randomized to PRT, placebo, or usual care with equal probability, balancing on age, sex, baseline pain, and opioid use using an imbalance-minimization algorithm 40 (eMethods in Supplement 2 ). The primary end point (posttreatment fMRI session) occurred 1 month after the baseline fMRI. Participants completed online follow-up assessments at 1, 2, 3, 6, and 12 months after the primary end point ( Figure 1 ).

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is jamapsychiatry-e212669-g001.jpg

MRI indicates magnetic resonance imaging.

PRT seeks to promote patients’ reconceptualization of primary (nociplastic) chronic pain as a brain-generated false alarm. PRT shares some concepts and techniques with existing treatments for pain 41 , 42 , 43 , 44 , 45 , 46 , 47 , 48 and with the cognitive behavioral treatment of panic disorder. 66

Participants completed a 1-hour telehealth evaluation and education session with a physician (H.S.) assessing likely centralized vs peripheral contributions to pain, including a review of available preexisting spinal imaging. Assessment findings and centralized pain education were shared with the patient (eAppendix 1 in Supplement 2 ).

Participants then completed 8 individual 1-hour therapy sessions with a therapist with extensive PRT experience (A.G. or C.U.) twice weekly for 4 weeks. Techniques included (1) providing personalized evidence for centralized pain; (2) guided reappraisal of pain sensations while seated and while engaging in feared postures or movements; (3) techniques addressing psychosocial threats (eg, difficult emotions) potentially amplifying pain; and (4) techniques to increase positive emotions and self-compassion. PRT followed the treatment protocol found in eAppendix 2 in Supplement 2 .

Treatment fidelity was assessed by independent raters coding audiorecordings of PRT sessions (eMethods and eAppendix 3 in Supplement 2 ). A mean (SD) of 4.93 (0.87) of 6 PRT elements were present in each session, and all sessions included at least 3 elements, indicating high treatment fidelity.

Open-label Placebo Plus Usual Care

Participants watched 2 videos describing how placebo treatments can powerfully relieve pain even when known to be inert (eg, they can automatically trigger the body’s natural healing response). 49 A subcutaneous injection described as saline was administered by a physician (K.K.) at the site of greatest back pain during an empathic, validating clinical encounter at an orthopedic medical center. Open-label placebo treatments are as effective or nearly as effective as traditional (deceptive) placebos for CBP and other chronic symptoms when administered in this manner (eMethods in Supplement 2 ). 50 , 51 , 52 Participants in this group were also asked to continue their ongoing care as usual and not start other new treatments until after the study period.

Participants in this group were given no additional treatment. They agreed to continue their ongoing care as usual and not start new treatments before the posttreatment assessment. After the posttreatment assessment, they were given a chronic pain workbook 53 and access to http://www.unlearnyourpain.com .

Clinical Measures

The primary outcome was average pain over the last week on a numerical rating scale from 0 to 10 from the Brief Pain Inventory Short Form, assessed at the 1-month postbaseline session. We also calculated the proportion of participants reporting pain reduction of 30% or more, pain reduction of 50% or more, and a pain score of 0 or 1, indicating a pain-free or nearly pain-free state. Secondary outcomes included pain interference (Oswestry Disability Index); Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) short forms for depression, anxiety, anger, and sleep quality; and the Positive and Negative Affect Scale (measure details in the eMethods in Supplement 2 ).

We considered 3 measures of pain beliefs as potential mediators: (1) the Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia (TSK-11), assessing belief that pain indicates injury and fear of movement; (2) the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS); and (3) the Survey of Pain Attitudes Emotion subscale (SOPA-Emotion), assessing beliefs that stress and negative emotion increase pain. Adverse events were recorded when participants spontaneously reported them to study personnel. Baseline pain was computed as the average score from 2 prerandomization assessments (eligibility session and pretreatment fMRI session).

Neuroimaging Measures

Structural T1 and multiband blood oxygenation level–dependent functional imaging was conducted on a 3-T Siemens Prisma Fit MRI scanner with standard fMRI preprocessing (eMethods in Supplement 2 ). During fMRI, participants completed (1) an evoked back pain task with a series of randomly ordered trials distending the back to 1 of 4 intensity levels and (2) a spontaneous pain scan in which participants rested and rated ongoing pain once per minute (design details in the eMethods in Supplement 2 ; fMRI data quality measures shown in eFigures 6 and 7 in Supplement 2 ). Participants rated pain during scanning on a visual analog scale from 0 (no pain) to 100 (worst pain imaginable).

Statistical Analyses

Intent-to-treat analyses (including all randomized patients) were performed for the primary outcome with a mixed-effects model ( fitlme , MATLAB 2020a), including 2 group × time interactions (PRT vs placebo × posttreatment vs pretreatment and PRT vs usual care × posttreatment vs pretreatment), covariates for age and sex, and a random intercept per participant. Treatment response rates for 30% or greater reduction in pain, 50% or greater reduction in pain, and a pain-free or nearly pain-free state at posttreatment and 1-year follow-up were based on all randomized patients; those missing data were considered nonresponders. For follow-up time points and secondary outcomes, we calculated Hedges g for the PRT vs placebo and PRT vs usual care comparisons. Follow-up time points were analyzed individually, testing group differences in change from baseline to each time points. The placebo vs usual care comparison will be reported elsewhere.

To investigate psychological treatment mechanisms, we (1) correlated pretreatment to posttreatment changes in pain intensity with pretreatment to posttreatment changes in pain beliefs (TSK-11, PCS, and SOPA-Emotion) within each group and (2) tested pretreatment to posttreatment changes in pain beliefs as mediators of treatment effects on pain at follow-up timepoints (1 through 12 months posttreatment), controlling for baseline pain. PRT vs placebo and PRT vs usual care were tested in separate models. We also tested the reverse: whether pretreatment to posttreatment pain reductions mediated treatment effects on pain beliefs at follow-up, controlling for baseline pain beliefs (eMethods in Supplement 2 ). Correlational and mediation analyses were not prespecified in the trial protocol.

Evoked Back Pain Analyses

An evoked back pain localizer identified brain regions positively associated with evoked back pain intensity at baseline. The localizer was conducted within a mask of regions of interest (medial prefrontal, posteromedial, insula, cingulate, and somatosensory cortices; amygdala; and nucleus accumbens; eMethods and eFigure 1 in Supplement 2 ; localizer task design in eFigure 8 in Supplement 2 ). We tested for treatment effects (group × time interactions) in the average activity of clusters positively associated with evoked back pain using a mixed-effects (random-effects) model, applying a 1-tailed threshold of P  < .05 owing to directional hypotheses that PRT would reduce activity in pain-positive clusters.

Spontaneous Pain Connectivity Analyses

Evoked pain analyses identified group × time interactions in the anterior insula, anterior midcingulate (aMCC), and a prefrontal region. We submitted these 3 regions as seeds to connectivity analyses in the spontaneous pain scan. We conducted permutation tests (threshold-free cluster-enhancement; eMethods in Supplement 2 ) testing for group × time interactions in connectivity between these seed regions and 2 areas most often demonstrating altered connectivity in chronic pain: (1) the midline default mode network, including the medial prefrontal and posteromedial cortex, and (2) primary somatosensory cortex (S1) 36 , 54 , 55 , 56 , 57 , 58 , 59 (masks in eFigure 2 in Supplement 2 ).

We randomized 151 participants (54% female; mean [SD] age, 41.1 [15.6] years; mean [SD] CBP duration, 10.0 [8.9] years). At baseline, patients reported low to moderate pain intensity scores (mean [SD], 4.10 [1.26]) to 4.41 [1.29]) and disability (mean [SD], 23.34 [10.12] on the Oswestry Disability Index), with similar pain and demographic characteristics across groups ( Table 1 ).

CharacteristicNo. (%)
Pain reprocessing therapyPlaceboUsual care
Age, mean (SD), y42.6 (16.2)39.4 (14.9)41.3 (15.9)
Sex
Female29 (58)25 (49)27 (54)
Male21 (42)26 (51)23 (46)
Education
High school or less000
Some college11 (22)15 (29)15 (30)
College graduate39 (78)36 (71)35 (70)
Married26 (52)25 (49)30 (60)
Race
American Indian or Alaskan Native001 (2)
Asian/Pacific Islander3 (6)2 (4)0
Black (not of Hispanic origin)02 (4)1 (2)
White (not of Hispanic origin)46 (92)45 (88)43 (86)
Other or unknown1 (2)2 (4)5 (10)
Hispanic ethnicity02 (4)2 (4)
Employment status
Full-time (>30 h/wk)33 (66)26 (51)28 (56)
Part-time (5-30 h/wk)10 (20)12 (24)13 (26)
Unemployed/lightly employed (<5 h/wk)7 (14)13 (25)9 (18)
Subjective socioeconomic status, mean (SD), 1-10 6.8 (1.8)6.4 (2.0)6.7 (1.6)
Exercise
Almost none6 (12)1 (2)4 (8)
1 h/wk4 (8)7 (14)9 (18)
3 h/wk17 (34)23 (45)14 (28)
7 h/wk19 (38)18 (35)21 (42)
≥14 h/wk4 (8)2 (4)2 (4)
Pain duration, mean (SD), y10.7 (9.7)8.9 (8.2)10.5 (8.9)
Current opioid use (yes/no)5 (10)2 (4)2 (4)
Pain in body sites besides back?
None5 (10)9 (18)4 (8)
A little29 (58)24 (47)28 (56)
A moderate amount11 (22)15 (29)16 (32)
A lot5 (10)3 (6)2 (4)

Of 50 participants randomized to PRT, 44 (88%) completed all treatment sessions and the posttreatment assessment. Five participants dropped out prior to initiating PRT and 1 had an unrelated medical emergency. Of 51 participants randomized to placebo, 44 (86%) received the treatment, all of whom completed the posttreatment assessment. Of the 50 participants randomized to usual care, 47 (94%) completed the posttreatment assessment ( Figure 1 ).

Twenty patients in the PRT group had preexisting spinal imaging, all of which showed at least 1 spinal anomaly (median of 4 findings per patient; eTable 1 in Supplement 2 ) assessed by a physician (H.S.) as not causal of pain (eMethods and eAppendix 1 in Supplement 2 ). 61

Clinical Outcomes

Patients randomized to PRT reported substantial reductions in pain intensity at posttreatment compared with both control groups, with a mean (SD) pain score of 1.18 (1.24) in the PRT group, 2.84 (1.64) in the placebo group, and 3.13 (1.45) in the usual care group ( Figure 2 ; Table 2 ). Patients in the PRT group reported a pain reduction of 1.79 (on the 0 to 10 numerical rating scale) relative to placebo ( t 137.63  = 6.06; P  <  . 001; g , −1.14; 95% CI, −1.65 to −0.71) and reported a pain reduction of 2.40 relative to the usual care group ( t 135.69  = 8.13; P  <  . 001; g , −1.74; 95% CI, −2.28 to −1.32). A total of 33 of 50 patients randomized to PRT (66%), corresponding to 73% of the 45 patients who initiated PRT, were pain-free or nearly pain-free at posttreatment, compared with 10 of 51 patients (20%) in the placebo group and 5 of 50 patients (10%) in the usual care group. At 1-year follow-up, effects of PRT on pain remained large relative to both control groups, with a mean (SD) pain score of 1.51 (1.59) in the PRT group, 2.79 (1.78) in the placebo group, and 3.00 (1.77) in the usual care group. Hedges g was −0.70 for PRT vs placebo ( P  = .001) and −1.05 for PRT vs usual care ( P  < .001) ( Table 2 ; treatment response rates in eTable 2 in Supplement 2 ; individual patient pain trajectories in eFigure 3 in Supplement 2 ).

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is jamapsychiatry-e212669-g002.jpg

A, Shading indicates standard error. B, Dots represent individual participants; thick lines represent the group mean. C, Percentage of patients reporting pain scores of 0 or 1 of 10 (ie, pain-free or nearly pain-free) at posttreatment and at 1-year follow-up. PRT indicates pain reprocessing therapy.

Between-group differences Mean (SD)PRT vs placebo, (SE) valuePRT vs usual care, (SE) value
PRTPlaceboUsual care
Pain intensity (0-10)
Baseline4.22 (1.21)4.16 (1.33)3.91 (1.24)NANANANA
Posttreatment1.18 (1.24)2.84 (1.64)3.13 (1.45)−1.14 (0.24)<.001−1.75 (0.24)<.001
At 1 mo1.26 (1.77)2.91 (1.97)3.07 (1.63)−0.83 (0.27)<.001−1.24 (0.29)<.001
At 2 mo1.59 (1.92)3.06 (1.89)3.00 (1.86)−0.84 (0.28).001−1.03 (0.28)<.001
At 3 mo1.54 (1.68)3.21 (2.02)3.27 (1.95)−0.93 (0.23)<.001−1.35 (0.25)<.001
At 6 mo1.39 (1.48)2.68 (2.08)2.95 (1.93)−0.74 (0.23).001−1.14 (0.26)<.001
At 12 mo1.51 (1.59)2.79 (1.78)3.00 (1.77)−0.70 (0.21).001−1.05 (0.24)<.001
Oswestry Disability Index (0-100)
Baseline23.70 (10.70)23.06 (10.14)23.26 (9.67)NANANANA
Posttreatment10.14 (10.63)19.00 (11.07)20.68 (10.68)−1.30 (0.28)<.001−1.70 (0.26)<.001
At 1 mo10.58 (14.26)18.68 (11.95)20.30 (9.04)−1.04 (0.25)<.001−1.61 (0.27)<.001
At 2 mo9.57 (12.86)19.43 (11.84)21.37 (11.07)−1.30 (0.29)<.001−1.55 (0.23)<.001
At 3 mo9.68 (13.39)21.42 (14.32)23.57 (13.36)−1.26 (0.28)<.001−1.61 (0.25)<.001
At 6 mo9.80 (11.94)18.50 (13.43)20.84 (11.57)−0.96 (0.26)<.001−1.3 (0.28)<.001
At 12 mo11.16 (13.13)18.52 (12.60)18.78 (12.59)−0.23<.001−0.83 (0.24)<.001
PROMIS depression, raw score (8-32)
Baseline14.66 (4.39)13.17 (4.67)12.85 (4.74)NANANANA
Posttreatment12.23 (4.94)11.75 (4.05)11.81 (4.45)−0.35 (0.24).099−0.56 (0.24).009
At 1 mo12.87 (5.23)10.64 (3.57)11.57 (4.61)0.13 (0.23).555−0.54 (0.25).019
At 2 mo12.51 (4.88)11.11 (4.95)11.76 (5.17)−0.08 (0.24).723−0.51 (0.24).028
At 3 mo11.47 (4.64)12.45 (6.09)12.30 (4.51)−0.57 (0.24).015−0.90 (0.22)<.001
At 6 mo12.90 (5.28)10.97 (4.00)11.84 (4.65)−0.09 (0.24).701−0.47 (0.23)0.40
At 12 mo12.53 (5.12)11.95 (5.86)12.75 (4.50)−0.20 (0.23).360−0.62 (0.24).007
PROMIS anger, raw score (5-25)
Baseline12.46 (3.73)10.97 (3.18)11.17 (3.18)NANANANA
Posttreatment9.52 (3.91)9.89 (3.81)10.45 (3.86)−0.62 (0.21).004−0.78 (0.21)<.001
At 1 mo9.50 (4.40)8.84 (3.27)10.55 (3.19)−0.23 (0.25).291−0.91 (0.25)<.001
At 2 mo10.70 (4.68)9.37 (3.30)10.00 (3.92)−0.11 (0.23).652−0.28 (0.25).231
At 3 mo9.31 (4.06)9.87 (4.78)10.49 (3.52)−0.52 (0.21).027−0.92 (0.25)<.001
At 6 mo9.83 (4.49)9.31 (2.96)10.51 (3.44)−0.38 (0.25).099−0.90 (0.23)<.001
At 12 mo10.49 (4.15)9.64 (3.55)10.89 (3.38)−0.16 (0.21).454−0.61 (0.22).008
PROMIS anxiety, raw scores (8-40)
Baseline16.37 (5.88)15.52 (5.83)15.11 (6.40)NANANANA
Posttreatment15.02 (6.16)13.89 (5.78)14.11 (6.99)0 (0.22)1.00−0.21 (0.21).318
At 1 mo14.58 (6.45)12.25 (4.81)13.75 (6.78)0.36 (0.20).109−0.29 (0.21).203
At 2 mo14.14 (7.07)13.23 (6.74)13.58 (6.75)0.02 (0.24).923−0.22 (0.25).348
At 3 mo13.75 (6.45)14.50 (7.42)14.08 (6.42)−0.34 (0.23).147−0.62 (0.21).009
At 6 mo14.88 (7.12)13.00 (5.14)14.59 (6.90)0.03 (0.24).907−0.50 (0.24).028
At 12 mo14.09 (6.79)14.07 (7.51)14.81 (6.94)−0.20 (0.22).362−0.56 (0.23).014
PROMIS sleep, raw score (8-40)
Baseline22.21 (6.54)22.65 (6.38)22.63 (6.26)NANANANA
Posttreatment17.73 (6.75)20.50 (6.17)20.89 (6.02)−0.41 (0.23).056−0.63 (0.22).003
At 1 mo17.18 (6.38)21.02 (6.34)21.62 (6.45)−0.46 (0.25).039−0.89 (0.27)<.001
At 2 mo17.08 (6.71)19.71 (6.72)21.74 (7.19)−0.38 (0.24).112−0.84 (0.27)<.001
At 3 mo16.67 (6.67)20.16 (7.05)21.73 (6.26)−0.44 (0.24).061−1.08 (0.24)<.001
At 6 mo17.85 (7.24)19.42 (6.22)21.38 (6.03)−0.29 (0.23).198−0.85 (0.23)<.001
At 12 mo18.11 (7.36)19.95 (5.79)21.19 (6.73)−0.23 (0.22).272−0.60 (0.25).009

Abbreviations: NA, not applicable; PROMIS, Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System; PRT, pain reprocessing therapy.

Analyses of secondary outcomes at posttreatment revealed significant reductions in disability and anger for PRT vs both controls ( g , −0.62 to −1.7; P  < .005) and improvements in sleep ( g , −0.56; P  = .009) and depression ( g , −0.63; P  = .003) relative to usual care ( Table 2 ). Treatment gains on secondary outcomes were largely maintained at 1-year follow-up ( Table 2 ). Significant PRT vs control effects were observed at posttreatment for positive affect (Positive and Negative Affect Schedule; g for PRT vs placebo, 0.63, g for PRT vs usual care, 0.59; P  < .005; eTable 3 in Supplement 2 ) but not for negative affect or alcohol, cannabis, or opioid use (eTable 3 in Supplement 2 ). Treatment satisfaction was high among participants in the PRT group (eTable 4 in Supplement 2 ).

Mediation Analyses

Pretreatment to posttreatment reductions in TSK-11 and pain intensity scores were correlated among participants in the PRT group ( r 42  = 0.44; P  = .003; eFigure 4 in Supplement 2 ). This correlation was not significant for the placebo condition ( r 42  = 0.16; P  = .29) or usual care condition ( r 45  = 0.27; P  = .07). Pretreatment to posttreatment changes in PCS and SOPA-Emotion scores did not correlate with pain reductions within any group.

Pretreatment to posttreatment reductions in TSK-11 scores mediated PRT vs placebo and PRT vs usual care effects on pain intensity at most follow-up time points (eFigure 4 and eTables 5 and 6 in Supplement 2 ). The reverse was also true: pretreatment to posttreatment pain reductions mediated PRT vs placebo and PRT vs usual care effects on TSK-11 at follow-up. Pretreatment to posttreatment changes in PCS and SOPA-Emotion did not mediate PRT vs control effects at any follow-up time point. Treatment effects on TSK-11 were very large at posttreatment ( g for PRT vs placebo, −1.90; g for PRT vs usual care,−1.67; P  < .001).

Neither age nor sex moderated the treatment effect on pain intensity (eMethods in Supplement 2 ). No adverse events were reported for PRT.

Neuroimaging Outcomes

Evoked back pain.

At baseline, increased back distention led to increased pain (mean [SD] for distention level 1, 32.15 [18.57]; distention level 2, 37.91 [20.30]; distention level 3, 46.70 [21.71]; distention level 4, 52.73 [21.78]). There was a significant effect of distention level on pain (mean [SD] β for inflation, 7.05 [5.06]; t 95  = 13.64; P  < .001. Individual patient-evoked pain data are shown in eFigure 5 in Supplement 2 .

Patients receiving PRT reported significant pretreatment to posttreatment reductions in evoked back pain relative to placebo (β, −13.05 on a 101-point visual analog scale; t 122.85  = −2.82; P  = .006; g , −0.60; 95% CI, −1.06 to −0.16) and relative to usual care (β, −19.61; t 79.52  = −4.03; P  < .001; g , −0.99; 95% CI, −1.50 to −0.55; Figure 3 A). Among patients in the PRT group, pretreatment to posttreatment reductions in evoked back pain and 1-week average back pain intensity were correlated ( r 32  = 0.47; P  = .005).

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is jamapsychiatry-e212669-g003.jpg

A, Error bars show standard error. B, Coordinates and statistics for activations provided in eTable 7 in Supplement 2 ; analyses conducted within a mask of regions of interest; eFigure 1 in Supplement 2 . C, Decreased evoked pain-related activity was observed in anterior midcingulate (aMCC) and anterior prefrontal regions for PRT vs placebo and left anterior insula for PRT vs usual care. D, Error bars show standard error. E, PRT vs control conditions increased aPFC-seeded (red clusters) and aIns-seeded (green clusters) connectivity with primary somatosensory cortex (permutation test, P  < .05). Inset shows seed regions, derived from evoked pain analyses; magenta outlines, PRT vs placebo; black outlines, PRT vs usual care. F, PRT vs usual care increased connectivity between an aMCC seed (yellow; derived from evoked back pain analyses) and the precuneus (orange). Connectivity analyses were conducted within primary somatosensory cortex and medial default mode network masks.

a P  < .001.

b P  < .05.

Localizer analyses identified 16 regions within the mask of interest positively associated with evoked pain intensity, including bilateral insula, cingulate, bilateral somatotopic back areas S1 and secondary somatosensory cortex, and prefrontal regions ( Figure 3 B; eFigure 1 and eTable 7 in Supplement 2 ). Relative to placebo, PRT reduced pain-related activity in aMCC ( t 133.48  = −1.73; P  = .04) and the anterior prefrontal cortex (aPFC; t 133.48  = −1.85; P  = .03). Relative to usual care, PRT reduced pain-related activity in the left anterior insula (aIns; t 120.1  = −2.34; P  = .01; Figure 3 C).

Spontaneous Pain

Patients receiving PRT reported reductions in spontaneous pain relative to placebo (β, −18.24 on a 101-point visual analog scale; t 140.66  = −4.59; P  < .001; g , −0.92; 95% CI, −1.44 to −0.47) and relative to usual care (β, −21.53; t 79  = −5.26; P  < .001; g , −1.11; 95% CI, −1.66 to −0.66; Figure 3 D).

We submitted the aMCC, aPFC, and aIns regions exhibiting treatment effects in evoked pain analyses as connectivity seed regions in the spontaneous pain task. Within S1, PRT vs placebo and PRT vs usual care led to increased aPFC- and aIns-seeded connectivity to 4 distinct S1 subregions (permutation test COPE-MAX, 3.55-3.91; P  < .05). Within the medial default mode network, PRT vs usual care increased aMCC-precuneus connectivity (permutation test COPE-MAX, 4.23; P  = .01; Figure 3 E; cluster coordinates and statistics in eTable 8 in Supplement 2 ). No group × time interactions were found for aPFC- or aIns-seeded connectivity to default mode network regions or for aMCC-seeded connectivity to S1.

PRT yielded large reductions in CBP intensity relative to open-label placebo and usual care control conditions in a community sample, with nearly two-thirds of randomized patients and 73% of those initiating PRT reporting they were pain-free or nearly pain-free at posttreatment. Large effects of PRT on pain continued at 1-year follow-up. PRT also reduced experimentally evoked back pain and spontaneous pain during fMRI with large effect sizes, and several secondary outcomes (eg, disability and anger) also improved for PRT relative to the control groups.

PRT targets primary (nociplastic) pain by shifting patients’ beliefs about the causes and threat value of pain. It presents pain as a reversible, brain-generated phenomenon not indicative of peripheral pathology, consistent with active inference and constructionist accounts of interoception and pain. 18 , 19 , 22 , 23 , 24 , 25 , 26 , 27 PRT builds on and extends existing psychological treatment models. Cognitive-behavioral, acceptance-based, and mindfulness-based interventions typically aim to improve functioning by decreasing pain catastrophizing, enhancing pain coping or acceptance, and promoting engagement in valued life activities. 41 , 44 , 46 , 48 , 62 Exposure-based treatments share with PRT an emphasis that painful activities are not injurious, 42 , 63 , 64 , 65 but do not emphasize reappraising pain sensations and reattributing the causes of pain. Some pain neuroscience education interventions present pain in a similar way as PRT, 43 though they typically lack guided exposure and reappraisal exercises.

Large reductions in pain are rarely observed in CBP psychological treatment trials. 11 , 12 Relatively unique components of PRT potentially contributing to the observed effects include (1) an in-depth medical and psychological assessment generating personalized evidence for centralized pain; (2) reattribution of pain to reversible learning- and affect-related brain processes rather than bodily injury; and (3) a unique combination of cognitive, somatic, and exposure-based techniques supporting pain reappraisal (eDiscussion in Supplement 2 ).

Correlational and mediational analysis results support changes in fear-inducing pain beliefs as a potential PRT mechanism. Effects of PRT on pain beliefs were also mediated by pain intensity reductions, perhaps because pain reductions promote beliefs in pain modifiability (eDiscussion in Supplement 2 ). Changes in pain beliefs are not unique to PRT, but PRT may more strongly change these beliefs compared with existing therapies (eTable 6 in Supplement 2 ).

These hypothesized mechanisms are consistent with extinction-based treatment approaches to anxiety disorders. 42 , 65 For example, 85% of patients became free of panic symptoms following treatment focused on reappraising somatic symptoms as caused by nondangerous central nervous system processes (eg, false alarms). 66

PRT reduced evoked pain-related activity in aPFC, aMCC, and aIns. The aPFC and adjacent dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) are implicated in the detection and inhibition of pain. 67 aPFC reductions following PRT suggest a potential reduction of pain-related signals or decreased prioritization of pain control. The aMCC and aIns are cortical convergence zones in the construction of negative affect in pain and other domains. 20 , 68 , 69 , 70 Cognitive pain regulation strategies, including mindful acceptance 38 , 39 and placebo analgesia, 24 , 25 , 28 have been found to reduce aMCC and aIns responses to pain, demonstrating parallels between experimental findings and our clinical findings. The aIns reductions in our study were not specific to PRT vs placebo and may reflect processes common to both these interventions.

PRT also increased aPFC and aIns connectivity to S1, aligning with previous findings that cognitive behavioral therapy for fibromyalgia 57 and acupuncture for CBP 55 increased aIns-S1 connectivity. Increased aPFC and aIns connectivity to S1 may reflect increased attention to somatosensory input in constructing pain. 71 This is congruent with mindfulness-based treatments promoting nonreactive attention to bodily sensations, reducing catastrophizing. 38 , 39 , 48 , 71 Yet, increased S1 connectivity has also been associated with increased clinical pain, 72 and the role of S1 connectivity remains unclear. 55 PRT vs usual care also increased aMCC-precuneus connectivity, with intermediate effects observed in participants receiving placebo treatment. Altered default mode connectivity has often been reported in chronic pain, although typically with heightened connectivity for patients vs controls (eDiscussion in Supplement 2 ). 36 , 54 , 56 , 58 , 59

Limitations

This study has limitations. The study sample was relatively well educated and active and reported long-standing low to moderate pain and disability at baseline. The physician and therapists were experts in the treatment model. Future studies should test generalizability to other patient populations, therapists, and treatment contexts (eDiscussion in Supplement 2 ). The fMRI effect sizes were modest, with some results not surviving whole-brain correction (eMethods in Supplement 2 ). Future trials should test PRT efficacy relative to leading psychological and medical treatments (eDiscussion in Supplement 2 ).

Conclusions

Overall, our findings raise key possibilities about the nature and treatment of primary CBP. Changing fear- and avoidance-inducing beliefs about the causes and threat value of pain may provide substantial, durable pain relief for people with primary CBP.

Supplement 1.

Trial protocol

Supplement 2.

Supplement 3..

Data sharing statement.

Mark Lumley, PhD

Mark Lumley, PhD, is a distinguished professor of psychology at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan.

Brain-induced pain, as opposed to inflammatory or neuropathic pain, may call for unique diagnoses and treatment plans.

Neural Pathway Pain — A Call for More Accurate Diagnoses

Brain-induced pain, as opposed to inflammatory or neuropathic pain, may call for unique diagnoses and treatment plans.

Upcoming Events

Past events.

2021


2019

Advances in Trauma Science: Opportunities to Unlock Chronic Pain

Thu Oct 5, 2023, 05:50 pm PDT TO 07:00 pm PDT

Join Our Mailing List

A Single Point of Access for frontline practitioners

Sep 22, 2017 | research/study

Emotional awareness and expression therapy for fibromyalgia pain.

mark lumley phd

Clinical Trial Returns Encouraging Results from Novel Psychological Intervention, EAET

A team of researchers from Wayne State University and the University of Michigan Medical Center reports encouraging results from a randomized clinical trial of a novel psychological therapy for fibromyalgia. The treatment approach, called Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET) encourages patients to view their pain as affected by emotional experiences that impact neural pathways in the brain. These experiences include trauma, conflict, and relationship difficulties to which patients are taught to respond with adaptive expression of feelings, both positive and negative. Lead author Mark Lumley, PhD, professor of psychology in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Wayne State University, commented, “Many people with fibromyalgia have experienced adversity in their lives, including victimization, family problems and internal conflicts, all of which create important emotions that are often suppressed or avoided. Emerging neuroscience research suggests that this can contribute strongly to pain and other physical symptoms.” The findings were published in the journal PAIN.

In the clinical trial, 230 adults with fibromyalgia were randomized to receive 1 of 3 treatment interventions over an 8-week period. The EAET approach was compared to an educational intervention and to cognitive behavioral therapy. At 6 months post-treatment, the groups were evaluated for severity of pain and other symptoms of their fibromyalgia. By a margin of 2 to 1, patients in the EAET cohort reported better outcomes across a range of measures than patients who received the educational intervention. EAET also was found to return better outcomes than cognitive behavioral therapy, often considered the “gold standard” for psychological intervention. Dr. Lumley stated, “Although this treatment does not help all people with fibromyalgia, many patients found it to be very helpful, and some had dramatic improvements in their lives and their health.”

Read more about the study findings.

The journal abstract may be read here .

Did you enjoy this article?

Subscribe to the PAINWeek Newsletter and get our latest articles and more direct to your inbox

Subscribe now

Edit content

Want to receive our Journal by mail? Sign up here.

Congratulations Mark Lumley

Mark Lumley has been awarded yet another grant - a substantial project ($3,373,000 in total costs), "Emotional Exposure and Cognitive Behavioral Therapies for Fibromyalgia" was funded by the NIH / National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. This is a 5-year grant that will test two competing psychological / behavioral interventions for the chronic pain condition, fibromyalgia: a novel emotional awareness and processing condition vs. standard CBT vs. an education control condition. Wayne State is the coordinating site and the research is being conducted in collaboration with a team from U of M (Dave Williams, PhD), and with Providence Hospital (Howard Schubiner, MD).

← Back to listing

IMAGES

  1. Mark LUMLEY

    mark lumley phd

  2. Live Q&A with Mark Lumley, PhD and Dr. Schubiner on Vimeo

    mark lumley phd

  3. Mark Lumley, Wayne State Unive [IMAGE]

    mark lumley phd

  4. The Role of Emotions in Pain Management

    mark lumley phd

  5. UW Psychiatry Grand Rounds

    mark lumley phd

  6. Mark Lumley

    mark lumley phd

COMMENTS

  1. Mark Lumley

    Mark Lumley. I am a native of Detroit and attended Wayne State University as an undergraduate, majoring in both psychology and biology. I completed the Ph.D. program in clinical and health psychology at the University of Florida in Gainesville from 1985 until 1990, including a pre-doctoral clinical psychology internship (1989-1990) at the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit.

  2. Mark Lumley

    Mark Lumley Home. Mark Lumley. Distinguished Professor of Psychology. Curriculum Vitae. Google Scholar. Wayne State Profile. 313-577-2247 [email protected]. ... PhD. I completed a pre-doctoral clinical psychology internship (1989 - 1990) at the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit, and I spent one year (1990 - 1991) as a post-doctoral fellow ...

  3. ‪Mark A. Lumley, Ph.D.‬

    479. 2008. Health effects of emotional disclosure in rheumatoid arthritis patients. JE Kelley, MA Lumley, JCC Leisen. Health Psychology 16 (4), 331-340. , 1997. 422. 1997. Trauma resilience training for police: Psychophysiological and performance effects.

  4. PDF Mark A. Lumley, Ph.D. Curriculum Vita

    Mark A. Lumley, Ph.D. Curriculum Vita (August 2022) Department of Psychology Wayne State University 5057 Woodward, Suite 7908 Detroit, Michigan 48202 Phone: (313) 577-2247 ... PhD students, who have taken a wide range of academic, training, and clinical positions. I directed

  5. Mark LUMLEY

    Mark LUMLEY | Cited by 10,251 | of Wayne State University, Michigan (WSU) | Read 264 publications | Contact Mark LUMLEY. ... Clinical psychology PhD students' admission experiences: Implications ...

  6. UW Psychiatry Grand Rounds

    Mark A. Lumley, PhD, is a clinical psychologist and Distinguished Professor in the Department of Psychology at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, USA. His research is internationally recognized for examining how emotional processes, including the lack of emotional awareness, or "alexithymia," and lack of emotional expression, are ...

  7. Lumley Lab team

    Jacob Blank is a first-year clinical psychology doctoral student working with Dr. Mark Lumley. In 2021, he graduated with a B.A. in Psychology from Temple University, where he also worked as a research assistant and intake coordinator at the Child & Adolescent Anxiety Disorders Clinic. Jacob then spent 2 years as a research assistant at McLean ...

  8. Psychological Therapy for Centralized Pain: An Integrative A ...

    Address correspondence to Mark A. Lumley, PhD, Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, 5057 Woodward Ave, Suite 7908, Detroit, MI 48202. E-mail: [email protected] Received for publication December 1, 2017; revision received July 20, 2018.

  9. TEAM

    Mark Lumley. PHD. Psychology. Distinguished Professor, Department of Psychology (Wayne State University), and pain psychology expert. Clinical. Steffen Stuerzebecher. ... PHD. Co-Founder & NED. 20+ years of step-change value creation through strategic corporate development. Three times mid-cap healthcare CEO; a.o., at Grünenthal (top-3 pain ...

  10. The Role of Emotions in Pain Management

    Mark A. Lumley, PhD, is a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Psychology at Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, where he also directs the PhD program in clinical psychology. After graduating in Clinical and Health Psychology from the University of Florida in 1990 and doing a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Michigan ...

  11. Mark Lumley

    Speaker: Mark Lumley: Distinguished Professor and Director of the Clinical Psychology PhD programAbstract: Current evidence-based psychological interventions...

  12. Effect of Pain Reprocessing Therapy vs Placebo and Usual Care for

    Findings. In this randomized clinical trial, 33 of 50 participants (66%) randomized to 4 weeks of pain reprocessing therapy were pain-free or nearly pain-free at posttreatment, compared with 10 of 51 participants (20%) randomized to placebo and 5 of 50 participants (10%) randomized to usual care, with gains largely maintained through 1-year follow-up.

  13. PDF Psychological Therapy for Centralized Pain: An Integrative Assessment

    Mark A. Lumley, PhD, and Howard Schubiner, MD ABSTRACT Objective: Chronic pain is a significant health problem that is increasing in prevalence, and advances in treatment are needed. Methods: We briefly review the leading evidence-based psychological therapies for chronic pain —cognitive-behavioral and acceptance/

  14. Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET)

    Mark A. Lumley, PhD Howard Schubiner, MD. Possible additional instructors: Shoshana Krohner, PhD, Brandon Yarns, MD, MPH Dan Kaufmann, PhD. Course Schedule: The course is currently structured as a 5-week course, with 3-hour sessions held once per week. The next course starts in the Fall of 2024, on Saturdays, Nov. 9 through Dec. 7, from 10 am ...

  15. Mark A. Lumley (aa5664)

    Mark A. Lumley (aa5664) University information. Title: Distinguished Professor Unit: Psychology Department: College of Liberal Arts & Science ORCID iD: 0000-0001-7095-8378 Contact information. [email protected]. 5057 Woodward, Suite 7908. Department of Psychology ...

  16. PDF Novel Directions in the Psychological Treatment of Chronic Pain Mark A

    From Acute to Chronic Pain Genetics / epigenetics (likely, but not known) Physiological: Poor sleep, obesity, muscle tension, autonomic dysregulation Behavioral: Fearful avoidance of healthy behavior Cognitive: Thoughts of tissue damage, helplessness Emotional: Negative mood; unresolved stressors Interpersonal: How others respond to pain

  17. Mark Lumley, PhD

    Mark Lumley, PhD, is a distinguished professor of psychology at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. Related. Pain Management. Neural Pathway Pain — A Call for More Accurate Diagnoses. Howard Schubiner, MD; Mark Lumley, PhD; Alan Gordon, LCSW. Journal Article. 9 Min Read.

  18. Events

    This treatment was innovated and researched by Howard Schubiner, MD (professor, Michigan State University College of Human Medicine) and Mark Lumley, PhD (professor, Wayne State University) and is listed as a "best practice" by the Department of Health and Human Services in their task force report to combat the opioid epidemic, This Might Hurt ...

  19. Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy for Fibromyalgia Pain

    Lead author Mark Lumley, PhD, professor of psychology in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Wayne State University, commented, "Many people with fibromyalgia have experienced adversity in their lives, including victimization, family problems and internal conflicts, all of which create important emotions that are often suppressed or ...

  20. Congratulations Mark Lumley

    Mark Lumley has been awarded yet another grant - a substantial project ($3,373,000 in total costs), "Emotional Exposure and Cognitive Behavioral Therapies for Fibromyalgia" was funded by the NIH / National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. ... PhD), and with Providence Hospital (Howard Schubiner, MD). ← Back to ...

  21. Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy for Chronic Pain

    Mark A. Lumley, PhD Howard Schubiner, MD. Possible additional instructors: Shoshana Krohner, PhD; Brandon Yarns, MD, MPH; Dan Kaufmann, PhD. Course Schedule: The course is currently structured as a 5-week course, with 3-hour sessions held once per week. The next course starts in the Fall of 2025, on Saturdays, from 10 am to 1 pm eastern US time.

  22. About Us

    Our laboratory is headed by Mark A. Lumley, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Psychology and a member of the APA-accredited Clinical Psychology Program at Wayne State University. Location 5057 Woodward Avenue, Suite 7908